Cole Lumpkin’s HELIX Is a Moving Portrait of Growth, Motion, and Self-Trust

Cole Lumpkin doesn’t approach music as a fixed destination. For the New York City–based artist, it’s a process, a constant unfolding. As a musician, producer, songwriter, and visual creative, Lumpkin operates with a rare level of self-sufficiency, building entire worlds from the ground up. His latest album, HELIX, is the clearest expression yet of that mindset. 

Born and raised in New York City, Lumpkin’s artistry carries the imprint of movement, intensity, and introspection. His music isn’t built to fit neatly into one genre. Instead, it lives at the intersection of progressive rock, modern pop, and emotionally driven balladry. What sets him apart isn’t just sound, but authorship. He plays nearly everything himself, writes his own material, produces his records, and even designs his own artwork. Each release feels authored rather than assembled. 

Music first entered Lumpkin’s life through experimentation. While still in high school, he began posting guitar covers on YouTube, slowly building an online audience that encouraged him to move beyond reinterpretation and into original work. That early momentum eventually led to a 

deal with indie label Suite 484 and a distribution partnership with Sony Music’s The Orchard, milestones that validated his independent path without compromising his creative control. 

HELIX, released January 9, stands as a deeply personal chapter in his evolution. The album documents what Lumpkin describes as the most formative year of his life, capturing a period marked by self-discovery, emotional confrontation, anxiety, depression, and growth. Rather than smoothing those experiences into something palatable, he lets them exist fully. The result is a record that feels lived-in, honest, and emotionally immediate. 

Every song on HELIX was written, composed, and produced by Lumpkin himself, with one track produced by aurora.heaven. The only feature comes from Zach Denike, who also contributed as a writer alongside Frank Zappa and aurora.heaven. Sonically, the album expands on the progressive pop foundation established in his debut project OTHERWORLDS, pushing further into layered arrangements and bold structural choices while maintaining an intimate emotional core. 

The way HELIX was made is just as telling as how it sounds. Rather than waiting for studio time, Lumpkin built the album wherever he was. Songs were worked on at home, on trains traveling upstate, in temporary spaces, and across Airbnbs while touring with Cool Company. Writing happened between shows, production continued in the touring van, and ideas were constantly revised as life unfolded around him. Once the album was fully formed, it was mixed at Quad Studios in New York City. That constant motion gave the record a sense of immediacy and honesty that might not have existed in a more traditional setting. 

Among the tracks, Lumpkin cites “Where I Left Me” and “90 Degrees” as current standouts, though he admits that connection shifts over time. That fluid relationship mirrors the album itself, which functions less as a statement carved in stone and more as a snapshot of becoming.

For Lumpkin, HELIX isn’t just another release. It’s a personal archive. He put his heart and soul into the project, shaping it not only sonically but visually as well. The album artwork, created entirely by Lumpkin, reinforces the idea that this record is a complete self-portrait, crafted without filters or intermediaries. 

Looking forward, Cole Lumpkin’s trajectory feels less about chasing trends and more about refining clarity. His work suggests an artist who trusts his instincts, values process over polish, and understands that growth doesn’t happen all at once. With HELIX, he offers listeners something rare: a record that doesn’t pretend to have all the answers, but isn’t afraid to document the search. 

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